I don’t know about chains, but I once knew a girl who liked to be tied to the bed...
It is interesting, these fantastic novels leftist write warning about “rightist dictatorships”, yet they always seemingly look more like the REALITY of actual leftist governments.
I don’t want to force pregant women to be chained to beds, i do however want to force those who want to abort their babies to strangle the life out of their own infasnts with their own hands ie. CONFRONT their own damned evil instead of paying to hire a hitman to take out their own baby....
Well they could either do that or just give the kid up for adoption no questions asked.
Abortion is BOTH the sin of Infantacide AND the sin of Hiring a “Hit-man” to do the “doirty woirk” for them.
Now I am not saying that Infanticide should be legal, but so many women have abortions and never have to confront the brutal HARSH reality of the action they are having performed on them via a third disinterested party ie. Aboprtionist like Gosnell.
In summary it is a sin “Murder by MEANS of a Convenience”!
Which makes it even worse than a mother strangling her newborn baby to death becasue it involves MORE than JUST the mother.
Abortion is also a breaking of the “Hippcratic oath” of “Doing no wrong”.... because the doctor is doing wrong by the baby.
Atwood and animals[edit]
Margaret Atwood has repeatedly made observations about our relationships to animals in her works. In Surfacing, one character remarks about eating animals: “The animals die that we may live, they are substitute people...And we eat them, out of cans or otherwise; we are eaters of death, dead Christ-flesh resurrecting inside us, granting us life.” Some characters in her books link sexual oppression to meat-eating and consequently give up meat-eating. In The Edible Woman, Atwood’s character Marian identifies with hunted animals and cries after hearing her fiancé’s experience of hunting and eviscerating a rabbit. Marian stops eating meat but then later returns to it.[33]
In Cat’s Eye, the narrator recognizes the similarity between a turkey and a baby. She looks at “the turkey, which resembles a trussed, headless baby. It has thrown off its disguise as a meal and has revealed itself to me for what it is, a large dead bird.” In Atwood’s Surfacing, a dead heron represents purposeless killing and prompts thoughts about other senseless deaths.
Source: Wikipedia
That's news to me.
I had the unfortunate duty to read The Handmaids Tale” a few years ago. It is truly awful. Not just in subject matter and theme; the writing is terrible. I hold it up as the worst book I have ever finished.